474 Mas see. — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Kars ten. 
brownish ; s. entirely white, squamulose, stuffed, firm, striate, 6-8 cm. ; sp. irregularly 
nodulose. Flesh white. 
On the ground. France. 
** Stem coloured . 
asinina, Kalchbr., Icon. Hym. Hung., p. 38, pi. xxii, fig. 1 (1873) 1 Sacc., 
Syll. v, p. 771 ; Ag. (Ino.) asininus , Kalchbr., in Fries, Hym. Eur., p. 230. 
P. convex then plane, subgibbous, dry, adpressedly fibrillose, hoary, at length 
rufous-tan, 3-6 cm. ; g. adnate, becoming distinctly sinuate, rather crowded, broad, 
yellowish-grey then dusky cinnamon, edge paler; s. solid, subventricose, or equal 
in small specimens, attenuated upwards, generally twisted, brownish-tan, fibrillose 
from the lax veil, annular zone fairly persistent, becoming umber from the spores, 
about 5 cm.; sp. subglobose, nodulose. 
On the ground. Gregarious or subcaespitose. Hungary, Holland. 
radiata, Peck, Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, xxii, p. 488 (1895); Sacc., Syll. xiv, 
P- 133- 
P. convex or subcampanulate, distinctly umbonate, silky-fibrillose, slightly 
rimulose, distinctly radiately wrinkled when dry, yellowish-brown, umbo darker, 
2-5 cm. ; g. emarginate, rather broad, crowded, brownish becoming tawny-cinnamon, 
edge whitish ; s. equal, solid, almost glabrous, a little paler than p., 3-5 cm. ; sp. sub- 
ovate, slightly nodulose or angular, 10-13 X 5-6 
Open grassy ground. United States (Mass.). 
The radiations of the pileus are not noticeable in the fresh plant (Peck). 
I have not seen a specimen of this species, which appears to depend for its 
distinctness mainly on a character not present in the living plant. 
B. Spores Smooth, 
III. Cystidia present. 
* Stem whitish or pallid. 
t Gills brownish , ochraceous , or cinnamon. 
hirtella, Bres., Fung. Trid., i, p. 52, tab. Iviii, f. 1 ; Sacc., Syll. v, p. 770. 
P. conico-campanulate, then expanded and umbonate, margin soon splitting, 
yellowish straw-colour, with numerous darker pilose squamules, disc glabrous, 
1 *5-2 *5 cm. ; g. adnate, rather crowded, brownish, edge white-pruinose ; s. stuffed, 
white then tinged straw-colour, slightly narrowed downwards, white-plumulose under 
a lens, with a minute subterranean bulb, 2-4 cm. ; sp. pip-shaped, smooth, 10-12 
X 6 n ; c. fusoid, 60-70 x 1 2-1 5 n. 
On the ground. Austria. 
Qu^let (FI. Myc., 105) considers this species to be a variety of I. lucifuga , from 
which it only differs in the straw-coloured pileus with darker squamules and brown 
gills. Spores and cystidia are the same in both. 
scabra, Karst., Hattsv., p. 457 (1879); Sacc., Syll. v, p. 767; Ag. (Ino.) 
scaler , Fries, Hym. Eur., p. 228 ; Cke., 111., pi. 391 ; Ag. scaler , Mull., FI. Daw., v, 
fasc. xiv, p. 7, tab. 832, f. 3 (1782); Low., Eng. Fungi, pi. 207. 
P. broadly conical, often subgibbous, dusky or pale yellowish tan, variegated 
with fibrous, adpressed darker scales, 1-5-3 cm.; g- adnexed, somewhat crowded, 
